Failure
February 5th, 2012 § Leave a Comment
In the realm of art, failure has a different currency. Failure, by definition, takes us beyond assumptions and what we think we know. Artists have long turned their attention to the unrealizability of the quest for perfection, or the open-endness of experiment, using both dissatisfaction and error as means to rethink how we understand our place in the world. The inevitable gap between the intention and realization of an artwork makes failure impossible to avoid. This very condition of art-making makes failure central to the complexities of artistic practice and its resonance with the surrounding world. Through failure one has the potential to stumble on the unexpected. When the conventions of representation are no longer fit for purpose, failure can open new possibilities. The judgement involved in naming something a success or a failure is symptomatic of the time and place, and contingent on the critical apparatus one uses to define it. While speculative thought strives for ever-deepening levels of understanding in search for content, irony asks questions, not to receive an answer but to draw out of content and form yet more questions. The ironist deals with the how of something being said rather than the what, paying a distanced attention to the surface of statements so as to identify gaps in knowledge and productive miscommunication. Where we embrace the irony of bad taste, we distance ourselves from the assumed natural order of things.
– FAILURE Documents of contemporary art
oh!
November 6th, 2011 Comments Off





my first attempt at micro blogging from my tablet. I hope they get the photo alignment right. I feel slightly blind, not being able to see my post on a decent mac. some stuff I came across recently…
Master Cheh
September 12th, 2011 § Leave a Comment

I caught Mr Cheh working on a new job for an Indian client

with English n Mandarin characters

tools Mr Cheh bought from Japan, Korea, China and everywhere whenever he travels
I managed to find a woodcarver who does signboards amongst other things, those black n gold shiny boards you see hanging at the entrance of Chinese restaurants, medical halls, pawn shops etc. But this is no machine carved quick solution. Mr Cheh said every afternoon he will be sitting outside his shop hand carving wood. It’s like a ritual, including the afternoon tea break. You can find him at Yong’s gallery along South Bridge road, just opposite Eu Tong Sen, near Maxwell food center.
Inspiring features
July 2nd, 2011 § Leave a Comment








